1890. ] American Invertebrate Paleontology. 137 
Genus and Species of Inarticulate Brachiopod from the Trenton 
Limestone. 
Charles A. White considers the Permian Formation of Texas 
in THE AMERICAN NATURALIST for January; and Invertebrate 
Fossils from the Pacific Coast in Bulletin 51, U. S. Geological 
Survey. 
J. F. Whiteaves, in Contributions to Canadian Palzontology, 
Vol. I., Part 2, has: On some Fossils from the Hamilton Forma- 
tion of Ontario; Fossils of the Triassic Rocks of British Colum- 
bia; and on Some Cretaceous Fossils from British Columbia. In 
the Transactions Royal Society of Canada, Vol. VIL, Descrip- 
tions of Eight New Species of Fossils from the Cambro-Silurian 
Rocks of Manitoba. 
The Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 
Vol. II, No. 2, contains, by R. P. Whitfield, Observations on 
some Imperfectly Known Fossils from the Calciferous Sandrock 
of Lake Champlain, and Descriptions of several New Forms; 
Additional Notes on Asaphus canalis Conrad; Description of a 
New Form of Fossil balanoid Cirripede from the Marcellus Shale 
of New York; ‘and a Note on the Faunal Resemblance between 
the Cretaceous Formation of New Jersey and that of the Gulf States. 
H. S. Williams has an abstract in the Proceedings A. A. A. A. 
for 1888 on the Use of Fossils in Determining the Age of 
Geological Terranes; and in the American Geologist for April, the 
Relation of the Devonian Fauna of Iowa. 
N. H. Winchell notices the Discovery of Lingula and Para- 
doxides in the Red Quartzites of Minnesota, in the Bulletin 
Minnesota Academy of Natural Science, Vol. III. 
Anthony Woodward, in the Journal of the New York Micro- 
-scopical Society, gives a Preliminary List of Foraminifera from 
Post-Pliocene Sand at Santa Barbara, California. 
Henry Woodward notes the Discovery of Turrilepas in the 
Utica Formation of Ottawa, Canada, in the Geo. Mag. for June. 
E. O. Ulrich has some Polyzoa and Ostracoda from the Cam- 
bro-Silurian Rocks of Manitoba, in Contributions to the Micro- 
Palzontology of the Cambro-Silurian Rocks of Canada, Part 3; 
on Lingulasma, a new Genus, and Eight New Species of Lingula 

